Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 20, 1960, edition 1 / Page 3
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Tuesday, September 20, 1960 THE DAILY TAH HEEL Pags" Tiirc-3 i -.T;T?y Peace ads Asked Pipe ", . " By WILBUR G. LANDRY LEOPOLD VILLE (UPI) Congolese officials worked be hind the scenes yesterday to try to arrange a reconciliation be tween Premier Patrice Lumum ba and President " Joseph Kasa vubu although the two arch rivals continued to quarrel bit terly and publicly. Army Col. Joseph Mobutu, who ousted both of them last week, appeared firmly in Con trol of the situation despite a second reported assassination attempt against him early yes terday. One attempt was re ported Sunday. Kasavubu and Lumumba were so far apart ihey even differed over whether they had been ' asked io make up. Lumumba said they had sign ed a reconciliation pact. Kasavubu denied this and a spokesman said Ihey had not seen each other in weeks. Jean Bolikango, Kasavubu's information minister and an avowed political enemy of Lu mumba, announced the Congo government is ready to offer Lumumba a job to "prevent a bloodbath," but the ; situation remained one of chaos. Panic, hit the city Monday when 400 recruits arrived to join the forces of the Col. Mobutu and were mistaken for rein forcements for Lumumba. Dock workers fled in terror and a Congolese soldier fired a shot in the general direction of the ar rivals. Later, cars , with loudspeakers toured the streets to announce the new arrivals were unarmed men coming down river by barge - to join Mobutu's forces and the situation became quiet again. . Bolikango told a news con ference Monday that Ma j. Victor Pakssa. brother-in-law of Lumumba's Vice Premier Antoine GizengaJ tried to kill, Mobutu Sunday. But he said nothing about an alleged sec ond attempt Monday morning when two shots were Ured at the colonel's house in Camp Leopold II. r. " -Mobutu, who seized control of the government last Wednesday and "neutralized" the battling Lumumba and Kasavubu who had fired each other was work ing to set up a public safety committee to direct the Congo until the situation becomes less tense. Lumumba announced he would fly to the United Nations session in New York to replace his own delegate, Thomas Kanza, but was beset by transportation troubles. The Soviets who had presented him an Ilyushin trans port plane took it back Satur day when the Soviet ambassa dor left the country under or ders by Mobutu to get out and stay out. The United Nations command here said it could not supply a plane since commercial airline facilities are available .for Lumumba. Friday To Talk On Fund Request Relieves Congestion g FlicMist .Carolina "On the Water front," starring Marlon Brando and Eva Marie Saint. Features at 1:12, 3:35, 5:58 and 8:21 p.m. "Varsity "I Passed for White," starring Sonya Wilde and James Franciscus. Times not available. Center (Durham) "I Passed for White," starring Sonya Wilde and James Franciscus' Times not available. 11 e TKo Numhor One iarVpt rtn ' - J H every campus ana ai every country club. Authentic "Ivy1 model, or 3-button young man's mode!, in your choice of the seven top colors - Including goli Handsomely embroidered metallic crest at no extra cost ii - U.N.C. Emblem At No Extra Charge THE HUB OF CHAPEL HILL 103 E. FRANKLIN ST. BILL TO HOME V PH. 2-1252 BILLS TO STUDENT President William C. Friday will be the first speaker of the year for the Faculty Club of the University at Chapel Hill today at 1 p.m. at the Carolina Inn ballroom. President Friday will discuss some phase of the University's biennial budget request, with special ' emphasis on plans as they affect the faculty at Chapel Hill. - - Prof. J. P. Harland, president of the Faculty Club, will preside Law Student Heads Region Bob Futrelle, a third year Carolina law student, has been appointed Regional Coordinator of Student Activities for the Young Democratic Clubs in North Carolina, Tennessee and Kentucky. Futrelle's chief function will be to stimulate the forrriation of student YDC organizations in the tri-state area. Futrelle has served as presi dent of both the UNC and State College YDC groups, and serv ed as YDC State Vice-President in 1958. The State College Club won the O. Max Gardner Award during his term of leadership. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Billiard stroke 6. Serene 10. Marry' secretly $ 11. A J:etis& ' 13. Story 14. Hayf ever symptom 15. Icelandic epic 16. Malt kiln (var.) 17. Printer's measure 18. Old Dutch (abbr.) 19. Bowline 21. Viper 22. Tear 24. Silly 26. Pry 2. Secluded spots 21. Theme 33.Lfusg egg 24. Dance step 26. Metallic rocks 28. Father 29. Land measure 40. Writing' fluid 41. Aid 43. Exchanges 45. External seed coating- 46. Carriages (Java) 47. Backbone 48. Auction 45. Wampum DO WST 20. Jap 1. Leonid3 anese 2. Magic lamp 21. An owner 3. Realtor's sign 5 . " 4. Say . Electrical Engineer (abbr.) 6. Girl's name M, I G STTAjSiSiE N T BPfTjEtfNjE L UFIR SjAlV E IS FfTjUjEflg stf Eptnll t i ei a Li.;; V!E NQCiQiL !lAjE PieTkh 1nOm"o1o s E TqppfrnT fwiAib e AMD NjG y tSA X M CtoriHiAn AGjE TVgElTsJS!LlEk 7. Incite 8. The sheltered side 9. Labyrinths. 12. Cordage "fiber 14. Presently age (var.) 23. Kettles 25. Jap- i anese drama ' 27. Hawai- , - . .- S-ia. xo.il bird Yesterday' Answer 29. wGunga. author 20. Paper fasteners 32. Vexes 34. Caresses 35. Tapestry 37. Form. 40. Heathen. image 42. Silkworm 44. Girl's name 47. Spain (abbr.) 75 ' -Khrushchev- (Continued from page 1) floor of the East River pier to speak of peace he was flanked by leaders of Soviet satellites including Janos Ka dar. Communist puppet who with Soviet aid put down the freedom revolt in Hungary. Besides Kadar, Khrushchev's anti-American team arriving on the Baltika included Todor Zhiv- kov of Bulgaria, Gheorghe Gehorghi-Dej of Romania, Niko lai V. Podgorny of the Ukraine and Kril T. Mazurov of Byelo russia. Also aboard were the Soviet and Hungarian foreign minis ters. On hand to greet them were Czech president Antonin No votny and Polish Communist Chief Wladyslaw Gomulka, who flew into New York Sunday night, Khrushchev arrived in a city swarming with security forces of the city, state and federal governments. New York shelters thousands of Iron Curtain refugees, some of whom ' took pari in a screaming, shoving demon stration Sunday at the Soviet U.N. headquarters on Park Avenue where ' Khrushchev went yesterday after his ar rival. In his dock side statement Khrushchev said: "I take pride in such a propa ganda mission in the good of peace and I shall spare no ef fort in making such propaganda until even the thick-skulled con vince themselves of the neces sity to reach agreement on gen eral disarmament f and thereby ensure world peace. The key to peace, he said, was held by Russia and the United E)tates. . " . . . . ymwymwy,. M;i ,-r rf-.-!.- "f v" n immggt ' : - i 1 "lHm'W SftV : f I . i f i rf.--1 y t - , - , , - - ' - r- . '. i - ' - r - s ; . . 1 ' : - " i Q Newspaper Vending Machines Replace Racks In Lenoir Hall . Empty.newspaper racks in the Lenoir . Hall lobby .surprised newspaper-reading UNC stu dents this week. Taking the place of the newspaper racks, which -have been used for a number of years, are three shiny new newspaper vending machines in the center of the lobby. In the above photo, graduate student Barbara Safreit and junior Jo Taylor attempt to get papers from the new mechani cal wonders. The change, was made to al leviate the congestion made by students purchasing newspapers near the dining room doors and the candy and book counter. Research Lab Rites Are Set The Francis Owen Blood Re search Laboratory of the School of Medicine will be dedicated at a special program that will be held Sunday, Sept. 25 at 2:30 p.m. The dedication exercises for the new unit, a part of the Department of Pathology, will be held in the School of Nurs ing Auditorium. A tour of the laboratory, located at Univer sity Lake, will follow the pro gram at 3:30 p.m. The purpose of the new lab oratory, as the name implies, is for research in the field of dis eases of the blood. Research will be done here on such blood dis eases as hemophilia, leukemia and other abnormalities of the blood. In response .to. the rumor that the change was a reflection on the honor system, George Prilla men director of student dining halls stated, "This, is not a re flection on the honor system, but a change ' to alleviate the crowded situation in the lobby." "In fact," he continued," we are planning to install a change machine there in the near fu ture, so this shows our trust in the students.". Freshman, Age 5 7, Carries Plan To Get University 5 i2 Cli By BILL HOBBS Teachers of freshman geogra phy, modern civilization, Eng lish and French can now breathe more easily. The large, handsome, white haired gentleman who has at tended their classes this week is not a special education in vestigator hired by the Uni versity to report on their teach ing methods. Nor is he an agent of the Un American Activities Committee bent on exposing their failure to have classes salute the flag and pledge allegiance every morning. He is simply a freshmari who happens to be 57 years old. Besides being a freshman at UNC, Robert Cherry is a re tired banker. He retired from his position as Vice President of the Richmond Federal Re serve Bank in August, 1959. He had been in charge of the bank's Charlotte branch for several years. After travelling in Europe for a year he returned to North Carolina and is now carrying out a long-held plan to obtain his A.B. degree and the other pleasures of college which he never had the chance to enjoy before. Cherry is one of the few freshmen this year who escap ed the disappointment of arriv ing at the various women's dorms on Open House night to find what seemed at first to be a large, well-organized stag party and on further inspection proved to be exactly that. (He has a wife and two chil dren who live in Chapel Hill with him.) Cherry also will probably not be asked for his draft card at the Rat or Harry's or have to worry about methods of obtain ing more potent refreshment. Unlike many freshmen, Cher ly spends a great deal of his time in the library (the large building at the end of Polk Place. Pie says that he is finding it somewhat difficult to get back into studying habits. This is one of the problems which ho lus in common with the other freshmen. mm rm rare-lie um HeII-0 f -1 - . By PETE IVEY Is a Southerner a hell-of-a-fellow because he cats fire? That is just one of the questions considered in a book published Sunday by the University of North Carolina Press written by nine historians, all of them with South ern relationships. "The Southerner as an American" is the title. The book is in the "debunk" tradition. It explodes some of the oldest Southern myths. The authors boldly consider the cur rent race question, from the long view of slavery and its meaning to the South. It is not true Jthal Recon struction in the South was all bad, declare the authors. The editor of the book is Charles G. Sellers, Shelby and Cleve land County native who grew up in Charlotte, got his Ph.D. degree at Chapel Hill and is now professor of history at the ' University of California, Berkeley. ' The book is almost certain to arouse controversy, in the South and in the nation. The authors consider economic, historical, political, social, and philosophic aspects of the Southerner and his role as an American. Most Americans are alike, sola tSOBI Students By ANN LAWSON Soviet Premier Khrushchev arrived in the United States in the midst of controversy. These are the opinions of UNC students asked this ques tion: "Nikita Khrushchev has been forbidden by our Slate. Department to leave Manhat tan Island during his stay in New York; also, he will not, be allowed to . enter into any . public interviews on major T.V. networks (except for straight news purposes). "Do you agree- or disagree with his isolation on Manhattan Island and with his not being allowed time on T.V.?".- David Grigg, president of Student Government, had this to say: "The State Department said they isolated Mr. Khrush chev for his own protection. I agree with his isolation if this is the only way. If this is not true, then I think they have made a great mistake. It ap pears to be a retaliation of the postponement of Ike's visit to Russia. We have passed up our chance for . a propaganda vic tory. We gain nothing from this; Khrushchev can do nothing here." t. Maurice McDonald, a junior from Si. Pauls, says he dis agrees with Khrushchev's iso lation because it can't accom plish anything, but he says yet it shows "Khrushchev can't push us around." Robert XaCrosse, a 1910 UNC graduate, had mixed feelings about Khrushchev's isolation. He said he agrees that "the security of our nation is an im portant factor;" however, he disagrees with' Khrushchev's not being allowed time on T.V., be cause "Khrushchev couldn't possibly do . any harm by talk ing, and he should be allowed to, if the opportunity arises." On the other hand, Dan Olsen, a law student from Chapel Hill, agreed completely with the State Department. "I think it is a good thing in view of the way he behaved at the summit meet ing in Paris, and considering his rudeness to Ike when he had agreed to the previous summit meeting." Also in agreement was Gib son Inksetter, a graduate stu dent from Hamilton, Canada. He remarked thai it sounded "prudent." The State Depart ment is suspicious of Khrush chev, and is quite within its right." He also said . thai Khrushchev will have the chance ai the U. N. io do what he wants. Harvey Peck, a third year dental student from Durham, said; "I agree. I do feel that the State Department acted in a correct manner in confining Mr. K. to Manhattan and in limit ing his national T.V. appear ances. Mr. K., if given any more freedom during his stay, would merely use his time to give us more of his two-faced propa ganda of which we have heard too much already. The policy I would follow during Mr. K.'s visit would be one which would ignore him completely." POGO ov ion you -zxusz you coN'f KNOW WHAT5 MY PAPPY open 'SM SQUZBlP AN 3-23 Zf t(V 1 -UPV LOCK AT THAT W?CM9 THS PSAU&!"' NO CfHS 10 HIM. r-- A 0$ &6y. ' 5 W'g OUGHT TO "AWOLg ALL IF fHBV 6 IN SHSUUS, yes. by Walt Kelly WT Y (V i you MIGHT 0$ 6'?StV PlHD OUT WHAT 1"Hl CALA i might AT THAT" AN' ecus? PEANUTS by Schulz f a ami good grief. THIS 15 FRIDAY ALREADy: THAT MEANS MY REPRIEVE 15 ALMOST UR AND I HAVE TO START WORRYING ABOUT THAT FREEWAY BUSINESS A6AIN.- w 111 1 c CAN'T STAND JUST CAN'T STAND DVry '.I I i UJHV HAVE I KO FRIENDS IN H!6H PLAGES?" Runaway Ra,r f . " : 7 s"" jgi P j y - .v $ V WWE'tt. NEVER. MAKE WOWl mSNUBBEPl ' : When their raff mooring lino D"; :WTJm parts, two "muskle" fishermen Ps fiP' f desperately fight the current to JWe . $3fi&fe&f: r-- reach the shore of tn river ; . . snlfr2ni- J ;a THE CURRENTS V SWING tN- J IF THAT f 25-POUND i TEST LINE, t HOLPS WElL. JUST CLEAR. THE RAPIDS.' you SJ SURE THINK. FOR. 2 t -251b. test" means the line itself will stand 25 pounds of pull, but with the aid of the "spring" in the pole, it will hold much more. LATER VCEROy? THANJCSJ - ml -iifl, F THNK ...AT BOTH ENDS' (SOT THE FILTER, - OOTTHE BLEND THE RIGHT TASTE BECAUSE ceroys got it... at both ends q ; rvr- THE FILTER... T Y GOT THE BLEND! WW J Q 9Q, 8KOWM A WILLIAMSON TOBACCO COP Northerner or Southerner, writes Prof. Grady McWhiney of Northwestern University. They watch the same TV proram, read the same books. '"Even their sex lives are similar." ac cording to the Kinsey Report. The picture cf the South erner as a "fire-ealer is "somewhat true not a mylh. But he thinks and talks him self mio mat attitude. The authors quoie ihe laie W. J. Cash who described the typi cal Southerner as one highly individualistic and tending to be one-hell-of-a-fellow. That accounts, in part, for the Confederate soldier beini one of the' greatest fighters of all time. Yet, the authors point out, Johnny Reb was not a well disciplined soldier. Good bat tler, yes. But not a well-drilled soldier by modern standards. Notions that the South is large ly "agricultural-minded also is false, and have been for a long time, say the writers. Other authors having chapters in the book include Kenan Pro fessor Hugh Holman of the UNC English Department and George B. Tindall of the History Department. 4 I ; TODAY ONLY "The academy avako PICTURE OF AUTO! A C0LUMCIA Reprint ,g J (f I THEIR MARRIAGE WAS A LIVING LIE... LIKE THE COLOR A LINE SHE V CROSSED! V , y ' : i . ' ' ' . T - "s . . : . 5s j I A 4 -A i. , i 1 v. ' Told with all the daring cf f the best- ' f i m rr -i -v 7. f I . Starring SO'iYA WILDE JAui FRANCISCUS- Ths exciting NEW Star of the year! Based on ft Move! "I Passed For White' AN ALLIED AET'STS PICTURE NOW PLAYING in m i t J I i ; . : i l i )
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 20, 1960, edition 1
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